Adolf Chybiński was a Polish historian, musicologist, and academic.
Early life and education
Adolf Eustachy Chybiński was the son of the industrialist Adolf and Maria z Górskich. He was educated at a gymnasium in Kraków, and studied German, classical philology and law at Jagiellonian University.
He received private lessons on piano and music theory in Kraków from Jan Drozdowski. In 1901-2 he studied in Heidelberg. From 1904-1908 in Munich, he studied musicology, art history and philosophy. In 1908 in Munich he defended his doctorate Contributions to the history of the timing and the Kapellmeisteramt in the epoch of Mensuralmusik . He continued his researches into the history of Polish music for several years in Munich, preparing a post-doctoral dissertation under the guidance of Guido Adler. He defended it in 1912 at the University of Lviv and became a lecturer and head of the Department of Musicology of this university.
Musicologist, Historian, Academic
From 1917 he was an associate professor at the University of Lviv, from 1920 a full professor; in the academic year 1928/1929 he was the dean of the Faculty of Humanities. In the years 1917-1927, he lectured at the same time on music theory at the Lviv Conservatory. After the first World War, he became a professor at Poznań University, and headed the Department of Musicology and lectured on the history of Old Polish music, Polish musical folklore and music theory. For a short time in 1948, he was the director of the Poznań Opera. He also chaired the Theoretic Section of the Music School Programming Committee and the State Music Publishing Council. In his academic research he dealt with the history of the Polish Renaissance and Baroque music as well as musical ethnography. He studied the works of, among others Mikołaj Gomółka, Jan z Lublina and Jacek Różycki. He was the initiator of making copies of XV - XVIII-century music manuscripts, and discovered many unknown monuments of Polish music from that period. He prepared the 22 issue of the cycle of the Publishing House of Old Polish Music, and the individual works of former composers. He initiated research on Polish musical folklore and the collecting of folk songs. He devoted a great deal of attention to highlander music - culture, as well as the nature of Podhale. Mountaineering was his passion, and he worked with The Tatra Museum in Zakopane for many years. He demonstrated the affinity of some melodies of Polish Tatra highlanders to the melodies of Czech, Slovak and Hungarian highlanders. In 1951, he published a collection of lesser-known melodies and folk songs From the Tatra Mountains to the Baltic Sea, and was involved editorially on the workAnalysis and explanation of the works of Frédéric Chopin. In addition, he worked as co-editor of "Kwartalnik Muzyczny" and "Polski Rocznik Muzykologiczny". During the German occupation he gave private music lessons and worked as a translator for a social insurance company. In 1945 Chybiński received a chair at the University of Poznań and headed the Faculty of Music here until 1952. In 1949 appeared the first volume of his monograph on Mieczysław Karłowicz, and in 1950 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Poznań. In 1952 he became an honorary member of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
Affiliations
In 1929 he became a correspondent member and in 1945 an active member of the Polish Academy of Learning; shortly before his death, he was granted the title of a full member of the Polish Academy of Sciences. In the years 1948-1949 he was a member of the Polish Academy of Learning Musicological Commission, and from 1920 the Scientific Society in Lviv. In 1948 he was one of the founding members of the Polish Composers' Union and the vice-president of the Musicology Section. In addition, he was active in the Poznań Society of Friends of Sciences and the Polish Tatra Society. He was honored with two memorial books. Among his friends he numbered Mieczysław Karłowicz, Grzegorz Fitelberg, Ludomir Różycki, Karol Szymanowski, Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz, and Jan Gwalbert Pawlikowski. His students included Józef Michał Chomiński, Zofia Lissa, and Stefania Turkewich. In 1947 he was awarded the Poznań Province Prize for his work, and in 1951 he received the State First Degree Award. Also in 1951 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from Poznań University. He was awarded the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, the Golden Cross of Merit for merits in the field of science and pedagogy for research on Polish early music, and the Order of the First Class Work Banner in connection with the 50th anniversary of musicological activity.